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Essentia Health is an integrated healthcare system with facilities in Minnesota, Wisconsin, and North Dakota. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] As of 2022 it has over 14,000 employees, including 2,125 physicians and credentialed practitioners.
The Adventist Health System was rebranded AdventHealth on January 2, 2019. It is the largest not-for-profit Protestant health care provider and one of the largest non-profit health systems in the nation. [21] [22] It has 45 hospital campuses, more than 8,200 licensed beds in nine states, and serves more than five million patients annually. [23]
Marshfield Clinic Health System is an integrated health system serving Wisconsin founded in 1916. The system contains several hospitals and many clinics throughout Wisconsin, as well as a medical research institute and an education division, and employs more than 1,200 doctors and other clinicians. [2] [3]
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This category contains various subcategories of physicians' specialties. For a description of these, see Specialty (medicine) . See also: Category:Medical researchers
William Osler Abbott (1902–1943) — co-developed the Miller-Abbott tube; William Stewart Agras (born 1929) — feeding behavior; Virginia Apgar (1909–1974) — anesthesiologist who devised the Apgar score used after childbirth
Ashland County is a county located in the U.S. state of Wisconsin. As of the 2020 census, the population was 16,027. [1] Its county seat is Ashland. [2] The county was formed on March 27, 1860, from La Pointe County. [3] The county partly overlaps with the reservation of the Bad River Band of the Lake Superior Tribe of Chippewa Indians.
This is a list of fictional doctors (characters that use the appellation "doctor", medical and otherwise), from literature, films, television, and other media.. Shakespeare created a doctor in his play Macbeth (c 1603) [1] with a "great many good doctors" having appeared in literature by the 1890s [2] and, in the early 1900s, the "rage for novel characters" included a number of "lady doctors". [3]